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Five-Room 
Face Brick Bungalow and 


Small House Plans 
(Second Edition) 


4 ite houses here shown form one of four series, presenting in 
separate folders 3 to 4 room, 5 room, 6 room, and 7 to 8 room plans. 
In each folder every two houses on opposite pages constitute a pair 
in which the same floor plans are reversed and the exterior designs so 
drawn as to fit either plan. Thus, in any pair of houses given you 
really have four choices, because you can have either exterior design 
with the floor plans just as shown or with the reversed plans on the 
opposite page. This not only offers you a choice of design with any 
given plan you prefer, but helps you in locating the house on the lot 
with reference to sun or prevailing wind. 

A special merit of these drawings is that three wall sections are 
given for each house, showing the complete wall construction for solid 
brick, face brick on hollow tile backing, and veneer, or face brick in- 
stead of siding over frame. This will enable you to obtain figures on 
costs of the various types of wall in your locality, and thus help you 
decide on the methods of construction you wish. 

As these plans have proved very popular, a new edition of this 
booklet is necessary, in which a number of desirable changes have 
been made. The nominal price we ask for them is far below their real 
money value to you and very much below their cost to us. To be 
frank, we want to sell you face brick, and to do so we put you in the 
way of getting the best type of house from both the material and ar- 
tistic points of view. In issuing these plans, the Service Department is 
guided by thoroughly trained and experienced architectural advice. 

We have levied upon the best practice, from every available source, 
and can thus offer you the most convenient and modern interior 
arrangements, combined with artistic beauty of exterior design, that 
it is possible to secure. As long as you are going to build, it will cost 
you no more to make your home beautiful and architecturally correct 
than to make it crude and unattractive. With these plans, we put 
into your hands architectural values in design which you could not 
possibly get otherwise for the nominal price we name. Even if you 
should not use the drawings, or wish to modify them, it would pay 
you to have them for study and comparison in helping to formulate 
your own ideas. 


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Price, Twenty-five Cents 


net 
Copyright, 1923, J. M. Adams, President, American Face Brick Association 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 501 


A Bungalow for Northern Exposure 


In this attractive Colonial design the living room 
has both front and rear exposure, thereby permit- 
ting the house to face north without losing the 
cheerful sunlight in the living room. 

Welcomed by the wide expanse of porch, one 
enters the living room of this attractive house and 
is greeted by a view of the cheerful ingle-nook and 
the garden beyond. When snowbound on a winter’s 
day, how delightful it is to sit before the blazing 
hearth and, with the seed catalogue, plan the 
gardening for the coming spring! 

The entire house has a feeling of light and 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


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airiness, as all the rooms are exposed on two sides. 
Even some of the closets have windows. 

The first floor, conveniently arranged, is de- 
scribed on the opposite page. The basement, which 
is the same in both houses, extends under the 
entire house, except the bedrooms and bath, and 
contains laundry, fuel and heater rooms, and a 
vegetable cellar. A garbage incinerator is installed 
at the base of the chimney in connection with the 
heating plant and disposes of the garbage directly 
from the kitchen. The ceiling height is 8 feet 6 
inches and the content, 23,500 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 502 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Bungalow That Looks Both Ways 


The plan, as shown opposite and here reversed, 
has been altered by narrowing the porch, thus 
allowing the addition of two fine bays and making 
of it a Western type of bungalow. 

The living room, centrally located, separates the 
bedrooms and bath from the kitchen and dining 
room. The bedrooms are well arranged as to furni- 
ture and have well-lighted closets. They are con- 
nected with the living room by a small hall from 
which opens the bathroom and a linen closet. 
There is a fine coat closet off the living room, 
adjacent to the garden entrance where children’s 


wraps, overshoes, and umbrellas may be deposited. 

The dining room opens from the living room 
with a pair of French doors. The kitchen is very 
compact and convenient. Cupboards are built in 
at both sides of the well-lighted sink. The enclosed 
rear porch accommodates the basement stairs and 
the ice box, saving the kitchen from the iceman’s 
tracks. 

The court on the rear could be made a very 
delightful spot with brick paving and a sun dial, 
pool, or flower bed. The ceiling height is the same 
as in No.501, but the content is 2,500 cubic feet less. 


AVERY LIBRARY 
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 


7 


Five-Room Bungalow, No. 503 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


An Attractive Colonial Bungalow 


To the lover of the Colonial, this design will 
make a strong appeal. The gambrel roof, always 
charming, gives additional space in the attic that 


may be utilized for a billiard room, a playroom 


for the children, or divided into two bedrooms 
and a bath, thereby gaining more space and greater 
use ata slight additional cost. To those interested, 
we send a print of the bedroom arrangement. 

The low sweeping lines of the house adapt it 
to any location. It would look as well on a narrow 
city lot as on the farm, on the hillside as well as 
in the valley, and should appeal to those who wish 


their home to appear to have grown up with its 
surroundings. Careful consideration of color and 
texture of both brick and mortar joint is all 
that is further required to make it a marked 
success. 

Other interior arrangements are described on 
the opposite page. Both houses have a fine base- 
ment under the rear half, reached by a stairway 
from the breakfast room above, and are complete 
with laundry, heater and fuel rooms, and a storage 
room for vegetables and other winter supplies. Ceil- 
ing height, 9 feet; content, 32,000 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 504 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


Comfort and Rest on a Shady Porch 


Broad and low, imparting its coolness to the 
balance of the house, the porch is here the domi- 
nant feature. Its wide, easy steps and brick floor 
give a feeling of hominess. The design is a strik- 
ingly new expression of plan No. 503 reversed. 

Extending across the front of the house, the 
living and dining rooms, separated only by a colon- 
nade, make one spacious room. Windows and 
casements give ample light and ventilation. At the 
end of the living room, and flanked by bookcases, 
is the fireplace, a real open fireplace, for a log fire 
on chill October days or throughout the winter. 


Connecting the dining room and kitchen is a 
breakfast room, a cheery little spot just a step from 
the kitchen. The kitchen, arranged for modern 
requirements, is small and compact, with a cup- 
board that takes the place of a pantry. The en- 
closed rear porch accommodates the refrigerator, 
keeping the iceman from the kitchen. The bed- 
room and bath are isolated from the main rooms 
yet connected with the kitchen. The sleeping porch 
has a closet that will accommodate a disappearing 
bed, thus making a sun room during the day. 
Ceiling height, 9 feet; content, 28,000 cubic feet. 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


Five-Room Cottage, No. 505 


A Charming Cottage in an Old-Fashioned Garden 


Here is a bungalow which is reminiscent of the 
English cottage and perfectly preserves the tradi- 
tion of simple charm, dignity, and comfort which 
we associate with that type. It illustrates the 
principle that well-considered simplicity is the 
keynote of the best design. 

The living room is especially well situated to 
command the view toward the front, serving as 
the center of the home’s activities, and still pre- 
serving a cozy privacy. It opens to a fine porch, 
not seen in the picture. The dining room is of gen- 
erous proportions, with three French doors opening 


on the terrace and a double casement window on 
the adjoining side. One of the most charming 
features of the house is the breakfast nook between 
the dining room and kitchen. 

The kitchen is compact, well lighted, and con- 
veniently arranged. Stairs from the hall give acces 
to the attic, which, though low, affords valuabl 
storage space. There are two comfortable bed- 
rooms with large closets, a bath, a coat closet, and 
a linen closet with a clothes chute to the laundry. 
The ceiling height and content are the same as 


in No. 506-A. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 506-A 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Pretty Bungalow of the Southern Type 


By changing the roof and porch, the English 
cottage on the opposite page has been transformed 
into an attractive bungalow of the Southern type 
to fit the reversed plan. Simple lines and masses 
constitute this design, which needs only the 
charm that good brickwork can give to make it 
appeal strongly to many a home-lover. 

You can build this house on a sixty-foot lot if 
you wish, with room for a driveway. Shrubs 
should be generously planted about the founda- 
tion. Corner posts and gate posts of the same 
brickwork as in the house would serve to tie the 


house into the landscape while forming terminals 
for a boundary hedge. A walk of brick from gate 
to entrance would admirably complete the com- 
position. 

The interior arrangements are described on the 
opposite page, where this plan is shown reversed. 
The basement arrangement is the same and in- 
cludes a heater room and fuel bins, laundry with 
drying space, and vegetable cellar, with surplus 
space that the owner may dispose of as he wishes. 
The ceiling height is 9 feet and the content, 
28,500 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 507 


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FIRST. FLOOR, 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


Planned for Summer Comfort 


The unusual shape in the plan of this Western 
one and one-half story bungalow gives all rooms a 
corner, which means fine ventilation. Another ex- 
cellent feature is the easy communication made 
possible by the central hall. The living room and 
dining room are connected by the entrance hall 
so that they may be thrown together for enter- 
taining, or the dining room may be closed off by 
French doors if desired. A breakfast nook, with 
cabinets, always popular and practical, connects 
dining room and kitchen, preventing kitchen odors 
from reaching the other parts of the house. The 


kitchen is compact and well lighted by windows 
above the sink. Cabinets displace the pantry and 
there is space near the door for the refrigerator, 
convenient for the iceman. 

The bedrooms are of a good size and have ample 
closets, and with the bath are well screened from 
the rest of the house. There is a fine linen closet 
and a coat closet off the hall. A stairway leads to 
the attic, which may be utilized for billiard room, 
or as suggested in the plan above. The ceiling 
heights are 9 feet in both stories and the content is 


30,250 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 508 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


An English Suggestion 


The charm of this English bungalow with the 
same plan as No. 507 reversed will be a constant 
joy and pleasure to those who live within; and built 
of brick, it will grow more mellow and interesting 
without as the years go by. 

Especially attractive with its broad side to the 
road, it is also very well suited to a narrow lot. If 
the porch were turned toward the street, a fifty- 
foot lot would leave ample room for a driveway 
at the side very convenient to the entrance door. 

The house would make a striking picture if 
placed on a knoll with the side entrance at grade 


and the two end porches well above the ground 
level. For the convenience of those who have a 
car, a garage could then be placed beneath one of 
the porches and heated from the house. The 
hooded entrance protects one from the elements 
while waiting to be admitted. 

The rear porch has good exposure and covers 
an outside basement stairway. The basement, as 
also in No. 507, contains laundry, heating plant, 
preserve closet, and vegetable cellar. An inside 
stairway leads to the floor above. Ceiling heights 
and content are the same as in the house opposite. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 509 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


An English Type with a Sleeping Porch 


That this bungalow and its reverse, shown 
opposite, have exactly the same arrangement of 
rooms, is the last thing anyone would think. Too 
often homes exactly alike are built in rows with- 
out due regard for a pleasing diversity in design, 
resulting in a deadening monotony which destroys 
otherwise real architectural merit. A pleasing 
variety, such as shown in these two houses, would 
not only improve the looks of the neighborhood 
but more readily secure sale of the houses. This 
exterior is distinctive and unusual, following 
English example, and affords an excellent oppor- 


tunity for the display of charming brickwork. 

The fine sleeping porch, with its wide expanse 
of windows, is well sheltered within the main body 
of the house, and may be closed and heated during 
the day, if so desired. 

he basement, which extends only under the 

rear half of the house, has a heating plant, fuel 
room, laundry, and vegetable cellar. As shown here 
the house is on a level lot, but with a slope to the 
rear, the entrance on the basement stairs may be 
so managed as to bring the door at grade. Ceiling 
height, 9 feet; content, 34,000 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 510 


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Designed or the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Decidedly Home Feeling 


This is a simple, compact little bungalow, set 
close to the ground, with airy porches, plenty of 
windows, and eaves to shade the walls. It has a 
pleasing exterior, and the plan, the reverse of 
No. 509, is, you will find, of unusual merit. 

The snug brick fireplace and wide window-nook 
make the living room cozy and comfortable with 
a pleasant outlook. French doors, a decorative 
feature in themselves, give privacy to the dining 
room while still allowing it to be made practically 
a part of the living room. 

The modern kitchen is small but complete, con- 


venient, and labor-saving. It has a double drain- 
board sink, ample cupboard and drawer space, a 
pantry for bulky stores, and a clothes chute to the 
laundry. The roomy service porch is a veritable 
“summer kitchen,” where in hot weather the 
housewife may do much of her work, or the family 
take their meals, while enjoying the view of the 
garden. The bedrooms and bath are well isolated, 
and the sleeping porch, opening from them, may 
be divided to give a private porch for each room. 
The basement is the same as in No. 509, as are 
also the ceiling height and content. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 511 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Good Porch Adds a Little Out-of-Doors to the Home 


Porches are an American institution. This 
Western bungalow has three. Note especially 
the wide, low and inviting front porch that draws 
you out of doors to its cool comfort, while still 
preserving a touch of privacy by reason of the low 
brick parapet which surrounds it. 

The living room and dining room extend across 
the entire front of the house, in a sweep of thirty- 
eight feet, broken only by a light colonnade into 
which bookcases are built. At one end is the brick 
fireplace, flanked by a second pair of bookcases, 
this being a book-lover’s room. At the other end of 


the long vista, in the dining room, is an attractive, 
built-in buffet of simple, straightforward design. 

The kitchen is compact and efficiently arranged, 
opening on an enclosed porch. It also has a door 
into one of the bedrooms. For the maximum of 
economy in the remainder of the house there is 
no hall, and the bathroom, which contains the 
linen closet and clothes chute, opens directly from 
the two bedrooms. Both bedrooms have ample 
closets, and one has a sleeping porch which can 
be opened on three sides. The ceiling height is 9 
feet and the content, 26,000 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 512 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


Symmetry, Simplicity, Dignity, and Comfort 


All these elements are here combined in the 
design of this captivating Western bungalow. The 
roof lines are low and sweeping, yet the attic is 
well ventilated with louvers at the ends so that the 
house will be cool in summer. It is not often that 
one finds a house that will fit well into the land- 
scape of the flat, treeless prairie. Usually, they 
are so bulky and high that they do not tie into the 
low horizon line. Imagine this bungalow covered 
with rambling roses or other vines in just such a 
setting. Nor would it be out of place in dense 
woods or on a hillside. In fact, it is quite a versa- 


tile design. Almost any color or texture of brick 
would be adaptable, depending, of course, on the 
immediate surroundings. 

The arrangement of the house is fully described 
on the opposite page. Both houses are provided 
with a good, light basement under the rear half 
only, reached from the first floor, as well as from 
the outside, by a stairway enclosed and covered 
by the rear porch. Laundry, vegetable cellar, 
heater and fuel rooms, and storage space are in- 
cluded in the basement plan. The ceiling height 
and content are the same as in No. 511. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 513 


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20-0" X 14-0" 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


Plenty of Windows Make This Home Bright and Airy 


Simple and effective, with a straightforward 
rectangular plan, this bungalow of the Western 
type should be a very economical one to build. 
The use of an attractive face brick laid in some 
distinctive bond and mortar joint would greatly 
enhance the attractiveness of this design. It would 
look exceedingly well with wide, deeply raked hori- 
zontal joints, and very thin vertical joints. The 
effect would be a series of horizontal shadow lines 
banding the entire building. 

With the reversed plan, on the opposite page, the 
interior arrangements of this house are described. 


Note especially the number and grouping of the 
windows, which besides giving an abundance of 
light and air in every room, are well placed with 
reference to the furniture. 

A well-ventilated attic, valuable as storage 
space, may be reached by a disappearing stairway 
in the hall ceiling. The basement, which extends 
under the entire house except the living room, is 
well lighted on the two sides and rear, and includes 
a laundry with large drying space, fruit and vege- 
table cellar, fuel bin and heating plant. The ceiling 
height is 9 feet and the content, 26,000 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 514 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Well-Planned House for a Narrow Lot 


In this type of bungalow, suitable for the narrow 
city, lot, the porch extends the full width of the 
house but the roof does not, thereby affording 
plenty of light for the living room. 

The spacious living room with its wide fireplace 
at one end has plenty of wall space for furniture 
and a good coat closet convenient to the entrance. 
A pair of French doors open into the well-lighted 
dining room which is large enough for all occasions. 
The bedrooms with good closets and the bath are 
well isolated from the principal rooms and have 
plenty of light and ventilation. 


The kitchen is but a few short steps from the 
dining room, a feature appreciated by those who 
do their own work. As there is no pantry in this 
plan, the kitchen is provided with a large cupboard 
and has room for a kitchen cabinet. The sink and 
range are convenient to each other and well 
lighted by two windows. 

The enclosed rear porch contains the basement 
stairs with an entrance at grade and accommodates 
the ice box, thus keeping the iceman out of the 
kitchen. The basement, ceiling height and content 
are the same as in No. 513. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 515 


LIVIAG ROM 
18°-0" x 129" 


DINING RCOM 
i2-0%10-0" 


Designed or the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


An Inviting Entrance 


There is a feeling of comfort and hominess about 
this Colonial bungalow, nestling so close to the 
ground. The dignity of the Colonial style is re- 
tained and accentuated by the symmetrical gables. 

The living room, the heart of the house, is 
centrally located, with the bedrooms and bath 
isolated on one side, while the kitchen and dining 
room occupy the other wing. Directly opposite 
the entrance is the fireplace with its cheerful wel- 
come, and beyond is the brick-paved porch over- 
looking the garden. 


The dining room is just large enough for the 


family, but when combined with the glazed sun 
porch, will accommodate a good-sized party. This 
porch, with its expanse of glass, would also make, 
if desired, an excellent conservatory for the lover 
of flowers. 

The kitchen is conveniently arranged with 
ample cabinets and a well-lighted sink. On one side 
is a cupboard and, on the other, space for a kitchen 
cabinet. The refrigerator goes in the rear entry 
beneath a convenient storage cabinet. The ceiling 


height is 8 feet 6 inches and the content, 22,000 
cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 516 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Spanish Colonial Exterior with a Practical Plan 


The Spanish type of bungalow, so well liked in 
some Western states, is fast gaining popularity 
throughout the country. This one may be fitted 
to any frontage desired, but retains the outlook 
on the garden, through the patio. 

It should be placed on a wide lot and would look 
especially well on a slight elevation. The outlook 
should be well considered and the house oriented 
to obtain the best views for the principal rooms. 
The color and texture of the brickwork will be 
determined greatly by the location. A tile, slate, 
or other substantial roof is recommended. 


The arrangement of rooms is described on the 
opposite page. Note that all rooms have exposure 
on two sides, giving the maximum of light, air and 
outlook, also that there are good bedroom, linen and 
coat closets, built-in bookcase, china and kitchen 
cabinets. A sleeping porch could be added on the 
side of the house accessible from both bedrooms. 
The well-lighted basement, under the entire house, 
is the same in both houses and contains a laundry 
with large drying space, heater room, fuel bins, 
vegetable cellar, and storage space. The ceiling 
height is 9 feet and the content, 22,000 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 517 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Little Summer Home by the Sea 


This charmingly simple bungalow would fit the 
summer water-side as naturally as the low hills 
and sandy beach do. But its versatile lines make 
it as suitable for a village or suburban street. The 
detail of the side wall with flowers, shrubs, and 
vine-clad trellises indicates the beautiful ensemble 
presented to the passer-by. 

The living room, with its splendid fireplace, 
is well lighted, and with the adjacent dining room 
gives ample space for entertaining your friends. 
The bedrooms on the other side of the house have 
cross light and ventilation and are equally con- 


venient to the bathroom through a short connect- 
ing hall. 

The kitchen opens upon a large screened porch, 
always useful for a variety of purposes. In the 
kitchen a hopper opens to a garbage incinerator 
in the chimney foundation, and a register just 
below the ceiling affords good ventilation. 

For a small family, or where the lady of the house 
wants to do her own work, a better arrangement 
could not well be planned. 

The ceiling height is 8 feet 6 inches and the 
content, 21,000 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 518 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Swiss Chalet Effect 


For places where extending eaves offer welcome 
shade this bungalow is especially suited, or makes 
its appeal to those who like this Swiss chalet 
effect. In any case, the design, worked out from 
the reversal of the plan opposite, has a home-like 
feeling and appears as something which has grown 
by a natural process out of the ground. 

Note the soldier and rowlock courses of brick 
that band the walls at pleasing intervals, and the 
panels, made by slightly different toned headers, 
that enhance the value of the fenestration. By 
choosing the right color and texture of brick, 


together with the kind and color of mortar joint, 
a most charming result may be obtained. 

With a sufficiently wide lot this house would 
make good appearance if turned so as to place 
the entrance on the side, provided the question 
of sunlight were properly met. Much care should 
be given to the immediate surroundings. 

The basement, as in the bungalow opposite, is 
provided with laundry and heater, coal bins, vege- 
table cellar, and storage rooms. The ceiling height 
is the same as No. 517, but because of the roof, 
the content is 600 cubic feet less. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 523 


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22°O"KI3"-0° 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


An Unusually Pleasing Design of Simple Lines 


A striking feature of this plan is the breakfast 
nook which opens into the dining room with 
French doors at one end, and into the kitchen at 
the other—the most practical and convenient spot 
in the house. With the sideboard beyond, the 
table may be set without a step. This arrangement 
also gives an extra seat at the end of the table not 
obtainable in the usual alcove. Also a fine place 
for the kiddies, when company is being enter- 
tained at the big table. 

The simple gabled side with an offset to provide 
the entrance presents a very homey and comfort- 


able appearance. The entrance leads through a 
vestibule to the central hall, in which is a conve- 
nient coat closet. The living room has a splendid 
fireplace with bookcases at either side, and opens 
on a sun parlor and a porch, making it a delight- 
fully light and airy spot. The bedrooms and bath 
are well separated from the rest of the house. 

The kitchen is exceptionally well arranged and 
has two cabinets, one over the ice box, in place of 
a pantry. The basement, ceiling heights, and con- 
tent are the same as in No. 524. We will furnish, 
upon request, a print of the second floors as shown. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 524 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Happy Reversal 


This house has been designed especially for the 
narrow city lot. It may be placed on as small a 
frontage as thirty-five feet. If, however, a drive- 
way to a garage is required, forty feet will be 
necessary. As the entrance is at the side of the 
house, half way from the front, it allows uninter- 
rupted space in the front for living quarters, and 
makes possible a small hall with direct connection 
to the bedrooms. 

While the house is especially suited to an in- 
side lot, it will also admirably fit on the corner. 
In such a case, if so desired, the entrance steps or 


the walk may easily be turned toward the street. 

It is the same plan as described on the opposite 
page but reversed and given a new exterior treat- 
ment. Simple in outline and detail, a good choice 
of the brick, the mortar joint, and the bond pat- 
tern is all that is necessary to make this house 
a jewel in the landscape. 

There is a fine, well-lighted, and ventilated 
basement with laundry, drying space, fruit cellar, 
and heating plant with coal bins provided. Ceiling 
heights, first floor 8 feet 6 inches, second floor 
8 feet; content, 31,250 cubic feet. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 525 


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DINING RGDM 
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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Homey Bungalow for a Narrow Inside Lot 


It is hard to find an ideal plan for the narrow 
city lot, as the problems to be solved are many. 
However, this plan will be found as near ideal as 
one can hope for. The entrance and kitchen have 
been placed about the middle of the house, thus 
leaving both ends free for light and air. It is so 
planned that a three-foot space will be left on the 
entrance side of the house and a minimum of one 
foot on the other side, except beyond the dining 
room, where the wall is set three feet further back 
so as to give more light. With a thirty-foot lot, 
there would be eight feet on the entrance side, 


which would be sufficient for a driveway to the 
garage in the rear. 

The treatment of the exterior is very simple. 
Note the pleasing effect of the soldier courses 
running about the house. The low-pitched roof 
has ventilating dormers on the four sides. This 
type, in connection with its reverse opposite, serves 
well for a row or group, especially if varied brick 
color tones and bonds are employed. For interior 
arrangements and basement see opposite page. 
The ceiling height is 8 feet 6 inches and the con- 
tent, 24,000 cubic feet. 


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LIVING ROOM 
ISS X19-S 


Five-Room Bungalow, No. 526 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


An Attractive Reversal 


The simple roof lines and window arrangement 
of this bungalow at once attract attention. The 
entrance, well protected under the main roof, 
leads directly into the living room. This room is 
L-shaped, with the fireplace so situated as to be 
enjoyed from both living and dining rooms. French 
doors open onto the front porch, shown here as a 
glazed-in sun parlor. In the dining room is a fine, 
built-in sideboard. If a room is finished in the 
attic a stairway over the basement stairs could 
be easily arranged. 

The kitchen, at one side of the dining room, is 


a model of convenience, with good light over the 
sink, well equipped cupboards, and a built-in 
garbage incinerator. The refrigerator is in the 
entry. The bedrooms and bath, opening on a 
connecting hall, are well isolated from the rest of 
the house. They have good closets and there is a 
fine linen and storage room off the hall. 

The basement is entirely excavated and is ar- 
ranged for laundry, heater and fuel rooms, vege- 
table cellar, and storage space. The ceiling height 
is the same as in No. 525, but due to the roof the 
content is 2,000 cubic feet more. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 527 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Bungalow, Comfortable and Homelike in Appearance 


Simple roof lines and window arrangement give 


a cozy effect to this design. Note the effective 
use of horizontal bands in the brickwork. Common 
bond with the joints raked out would be quite 
appropriate. As shown above, this house may be 
placed on a narrow lot with the driveway and 
entrance at the side, while both this and the reverse 
design are exceptionally well planned for a corner 
lot as pictured on the opposite page. In the latter 
case, the garage driveway may run directly to the 
street instead of past the front entrance. 

The garage is separate from the house, but con- 


nected by the back porch over which the main 
roof extends. It is readily accessible and heated 
from the house. 

Simplicity of construction, which makes for 
economy, has not been overlooked. The plan is 
rectangular, without breaks, and has one straight 
bearing wall through the middle. The entire space, 
except under the porches, is excavated for a base- 
ment which contains the laundry, vegetable cellar, 
heating plant, and fuel bins. The ceiling height is 
the same as in No. 528, but due to the low roof the 
content is 4,000 cubic feet less. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 528 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Bungalow with Additional Rooms Possible Upstairs 


With this attractive reversal of the design shown 
opposite, three rooms and a bath may be obtained 
on the second floor. We will include a print of the 
second story upon request. 

The arrangement of the first floor is unusual. 
Note the extent of space from dining room to sun 
porch, which may be thrown together if desired, 
or closed off by French doors. The porch is here 
shown divided, one portion of which may be used 
as a sleeping porch if desired. 

The bedrooms and bath are connected with the 
entrance hall by a second hall. The stairs to the 


second floor are convenient to the entrance. The 
breakfast room and serving pantry are combined. 

The kitchen is well arranged and has three 
windows. Cabinets in the breakfast room and 
kitchen take the place of the pantry. There is 
a garbage incinerator in connection with the 
kitchen chimney. An inside stairway from the 
kitchen leads to the basement, which is the same 
as in No. 527. The outside stairway is placed 
under the back porch. 

Ceiling height, 8 feet 6 inches. Content: house, 
37,000 cubic feet, garage, 3,000. 


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Five-Room House, No. 529 


SLEEPING 
PORCH 
1FO% 9-0" 


GARAGE 
18°01 O° 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Charming English Type 


This plan combines many popular features. The 
living room occupies one end of the house, and 
obtains good light and excellent outlook on three 
sides. The cheerful fireplace, with the adjacent 
built-in book shelves, will become the heart of the 
home where the family will gather on a winter’s 
evening. Double French doors open from the liv- 
ing room to the porch, and a wide opening leads 
to the hall, which is centrally located, thus making 
communication with all parts of the house easy. 
The dining room opens from this hall and connects 
directly with the kitchen. The kitchen is equipped 


with cabinets and has additional storage space in 
the cold room. 

On the second floor there are two good bedrooms 
each occupying an end of the house and a bath- 
room between them. A sleeping porch at one end 
is an added feature. Besides the bedroom closets, 
which are large and lighted by windows, there is a 
convenient linen closet in the hall. 

The basement contains heating plant, laundry, 
incinerator, vegetable cellar, and storage. Ceiling 
heights, first story, 8 feet 6 inches, second story, 
8 feet; content, 32,000 cubic feet. 


GARAGE 
(6-Ont'O" 


LIVING R@M 
BO MIIS 


SECOND FLOOR PLAN 


PIRST PLOOR PLAN 


Five-Room House, No. 530 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


Modern Example of a Dutch Colonial 


Quaint and charming, the Dutch Colonial is 
especially adaptable to the requirements of the 
modern home. The sheltering eaves give a low, 
one-story effect, while the graceful gambrel roof 
makes good second story rooms possible. It is here 
shown on a corner lot, but may occupy an inside 
lot and may be placed either end-wise or broadside 
to the street, thus fitting lots of various widths. 

The garage is built in connection with and heated 
from the house. One may enter it from the out- 
side by way of the back porch under cover. This 
outside connection makes the garage safer from 


fire than where it is directly connected with a room 
of the house; besides, it cuts off all odors from 
entering the house. 

Flemish or English cross bond treatment of the 
brickwork, with a flush cut mortar joint that con- 
trasts in color with the brick, would be most ap- 
propriate and effective. 

Being a reversal of No. 529, a full description 
of the interior arrangements and basement has 
already been given on the opposite page. The 
ceiling heights and content also are the same as 
in the house opposite. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 531 


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DINING Room 
16-0" x 129° 


LIVING RGM 
15-O°%25-6" 


PORCH 
11-0" WIDE 


364 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Spacious and Homey Bungalow 


This typical Western bungalow seems to nestle 
snugly down to the ground and should appeal to 
those wishing a low, restful feeling to their home. 
This low horizontal effect is not only attractive, 
but is economical in that it reduces the height 
of the exterior wall. The wide overhanging eaves 
give splendid protection to the house from the hot 
sun and driving storms. 

Although the picture shows this bungalow on 
a level site, it would be as suitable for a lot that 
slopes toward the rear, as certain adjustments can 
be made at the rear entrance to permit this. The 


attic is ventilated by dormers on the sides of the 
roof not shown. 

The interior arrangement is fully described on 
the opposite page, where this plan is simply 
reversed. The basement, as in No. 532, extends 
under the entire house, except the living room and 
porch, and is large enough to include a good- 
sized, well-lighted laundry, the heating plant with 
its fuel bins, a vegetable cellar, and storage room. 
It is an easy matter, however, to enlarge or reduce 
the basement to any extent desired. Ceiling height, 
9 feet 3 inches; content, 37,500 cubic feet. 


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LIVING R@M 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 532 


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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


A Distinctive Gabled Effect 


For those who do notwish as much porch as in the 
design opposite, or who live in a climate where an 
uncovered porch may be desirable, this exterior 
with its two open terraces should make an appeal. 
One of the gabled porches could be glazed and 
turned into a sun parlor if desired. 

From the side porch the main entrance door 
leads into the large living room with a coat closet 
close at hand. This room is splendidly lighted on 
three sides and has a fine brick fireplace on the 
broad side. Opposite the fireplace French doors lead 
to the dining room. Between the dining room and 


kitchen is a breakfast room with a china cabinet. 

The kitchen is well lighted by two windows 
above the sink. There is a broom closet and a 
good pantry and a cabinet above the refrigerator 
in the entry. A grade entrance on the stairs 
eliminates an outside stairway. The bedrooms are 
located so as to have good ventilation and are 
connected with the rest of the house by a con- 
venient hall. The front bedroom has a door to 
the porch, which in many cases would be a con- 
venience. The basement, ceiling height, and 
content are the same as in No. 531. 


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Five-Room Bungalow, No. 533 


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LIVING ROM 


1S!0%K 17/0" ° 12/6’ 15+0° | 


FIRST FLOR 


Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


An Ideal Gulf Coast Bungalow 


This attractive bungalow of the New Orleans 
type meets conditions, where it is desirable, on 
account of a high water line, to have the basement 
built entirely above the ground. Although this 
feature, together with the high ceilings, often re- 
sults in a very stilted, ill-proportioned exterior, 
the designer here has very cleverly utilized a 
terrace in front of the house to reduce its height, 
while the stairs so attractively set in the corner 
tend toward the same effect. The panels of the 
porch, the lattice, and the ornamental chimney 
need nothing more than the color and texture of the 


brickwork to make this design a decided success. 

This plan would require a forty-five or fifty foot 
inside lot if the driveway is desired. If placed on 
a corner lot, however, the entrance to the garage 
would face the side street and a minimum of forty 
feet could be used. In that event, the terrace 
should be continued around the side of the house. 

A description of the interior arrangements, in 
which the rooms are unusually large, is given on 
the opposite page. The ceiling heights are base- 
ment, 7 feet 6 inches, first floor 9 feet 6 inches, and 
the content is 35,500 cubic feet. 


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_ ROM 
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LIVING R@M 
15/0°x 17/0" 


BASEMENT 


Five-Room Bungalow, No. 534 


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|USE FACE BR. 
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Designed for the Service Department of The American Face Brick Association 


Suitable for the Hillside 


While the plan on the opposite page has here 
been reversed, the porch and garage arrangement 
have been essentially changed, thus producing 
another attractive exterior. It is shown here on a 
hillside location, but could be built on the level as 
well as the house opposite, which, as a matter of 
fact, could also be built on a sloping site. 

The living room, entered directly from the porch, 
together with the dining room, occupy the entire 
front of the house. Connecting the dining room and 
kitchen is a breakfast room with a china cabinet. 
The kitchen is well lighted with a double window 


over the sink and has a cabinet which replaces a 
pantry. The refrigerator is iced from the back 
porch. Two bedrooms, a sleeping porch and a bath 
complete the plan. There are coat and linen closets 
and a stairway leading both to the basement and 
attic off the hall. 

Besides the garage, the basement provides for a 
heating plant and fuel bins, if desired, laundry, 
preserve closet, servant’s room with toilet and 
additional space that might be utilized for a play- 
room, workshop, etc. The ceiling heights and 
content are the same as in No. 533. 


IH 


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How to Order Plans 


When you decide to order one of these houses, 
simply give the number under the lower left hand 
corner of the plate. If, however, you want one ex- 
terior design but with the floor plans shown in con- 
nection with the other design of the pair, say: Design 
No.___, Plan No.___, giving the numbers under the 
respective plates. 

Each set we send you constitutes the complete ar- 
chitectural instrumentalities for building the house, 
viz: the drawings and specifications. The drawings 
are made up of the floor plans, the elevations, and the 
: details, all drawn to proper scale, and accurately di- 
mensioned. 

The price is $15.00, which includes, besides the 
drawings and specifications, complete estimates of 
material required for the brickwork of the different 
types of wall. Additional copies of drawings, speci- 
fications, and quantity estimates will be furnished at 
$1.25 for drawings, $1.25 for specifications, and 50 
cents for quantity estimates. We shall be glad to give 
you any assistance possible in the way of explanations, 
suggestions, or modifications of minor details. We 
strongly urge the prospective builder, in using these 
plans, to make no essential change in the exterior design. 


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AMERICAN FACE BRICK ASSOCIATION 
130 NORTH WELLS STREET 


CHICAGO 


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